Ephemeral city: Cheap print and urban culture in Renaissance Venice
Rosa Salzberg
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Description for Ephemeral city: Cheap print and urban culture in Renaissance Venice
Paperback. .
Ephemeral city explores the rapid rise of cheap print and how it permeated Venetian urban culture in the Renaissance. It offers the first view of one of the city's most productive and creative industries from the bottom up and a new and unexpected vision of Renaissance culture, characterised by the fluid mobility and dynamic intermingling of texts, ideas, goods and people. Closely intertwined with oral culture and often peddled in the streets, cheap printed texts helped to open up new audiences for literature, providing information and entertainment to a diverse public and transforming the city into an ... Read more
Ephemeral city explores the rapid rise of cheap print and how it permeated Venetian urban culture in the Renaissance. It offers the first view of one of the city's most productive and creative industries from the bottom up and a new and unexpected vision of Renaissance culture, characterised by the fluid mobility and dynamic intermingling of texts, ideas, goods and people. Closely intertwined with oral culture and often peddled in the streets, cheap printed texts helped to open up new audiences for literature, providing information and entertainment to a diverse public and transforming the city into an ... Read more
Product Details
Publisher
Manchester University Press
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2016
Condition
New
Weight
377g
Number of Pages
240
Place of Publication
Manchester, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781784993443
SKU
V9781784993443
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 4 to 8 working days
Ref
99-3
About Rosa Salzberg
Rosa Salzberg is Assistant Professor of Italian Renaissance History at the University of Warwick -- .
Reviews for Ephemeral city: Cheap print and urban culture in Renaissance Venice
'This vivid study gives for the first time solid form to an elusive topic, viewing this thriving and distinctive sector of the city's commerce both from street level and from the perspective of the state and the Roman Church as they struggled to control it.' Emeritus Professor Brian Richardson, University of Leeds 'It is only very ... Read more